Indiana Sheriff to Obama: I will disregard Executive Order calling for Gun Confiscation in My County

Several sheriffs have spoken out over the past couple of years against more gun control laws. Now, Elkhart County Sheriff Brad Rogers has taken his stance and made it clear to the Obama administration that he will not submit to unconstitutional executive orders to confiscate guns from Americans in his county.

"We've always had this conversation that we need more reasonable gun control put in place," Rogers said. "Well we have what is reasonable, in my opinion, and in fact it's probably overdone."

"I'm from the government, and I don't think the government has any place in gun registration," Rogers added. "The government shouldn't know who's got weapons … we've seen in other countries what could happen when the government knows who has what guns."

"And so I always discourage people from ever registering any guns – it's not a law in Indiana, so it's not like I'm asking anyone to break the law," said Rogers. "I'm just saying if someone wants to come into the sheriff's office and register their gun I will let them do it – but quite frankly it's not something we push or promote."

Our sheriff's department in the county I live in is very much the same way. Rogers went on to state that any executive orders given by Obama to infringe on the rights of the citizens of his county to keep and bear arms would be ignored.

"In fact, if President Obama today said, 'I'm creating an executive order that all sheriffs and police chiefs around this nation need to start registering firearms,' I will disregard it," Rogers said.

We reported on Sheriff Rogers work back in 2014 in a piece on Constitutional sheriffs.

Sheriff Rogers is a GOA (Guns of America) Life Member who interposed himself between the Food and Drug Administration and a raw milk dairy farmer. The feds were on the verge of confiscating the farmer's equipment which would have bankrupted him.

But Sheriff Rogers communicated with the head attorney at the FDA and told her that if they put one more foot on the farmer's land, he would arrest them. She, in turn, threatened to arrest him. Rogers simply ended the debate by replying: "Game on." That was almost three years ago, and the FDA has been MIA ever since.

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